Why Life Matters Fifty Ecosystems of the Heart and Mind / by Michael Charles Tobias, Jane Gray Morrison.

Dr. Michael Charles Tobias and Jane Gray Morrison are world-renowned ecological philosophers and activists, interdisciplinary social and environmental scientists and broad-ranging, deeply committed humanists. This collection of fifty essays and interviews comprises an invigorating, outspoken, provoc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tobias, Michael Charles (Author), Morrison, Jane Gray (Author)
Corporate Author: SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2014.
Edition:1st ed. 2014.
Series:Springer eBook Collection.
Subjects:
Online Access:Click to view e-book
Holy Cross Note:Loaded electronically.
Electronic access restricted to members of the Holy Cross Community.
Table of Contents:
  • Part One: Nature & Human Economics
  • 1) “Technology, Business and Nature: An Economic Primer on Winners and Losers”
  • 2) “Women, Wall Street and Mitigating Climate Change: The Critical Importance of WOCAN”
  • 3) “The New Business of Business: Evolution of Culture and the Survival of Humankind”.-4) “Wall Street After Rio: A Discussion With Calvert Investments’ Senior Sustainability Research Analyst, Ms. Ellen Kennedy"
  • 5) “Investing in the End-Game: An Earth Day Post-Mortem”
  • 6) “Just When You Thought You Could Bank On It”
  • Part Two: The Carbon-Negative Ideal
  • 7) “Super Grid”
  • 8) “Ecuador’s Imperiled Paradise: One of the World’s Most Important, If Least Known Battles – A Conversation with Dr. Ivonne Baki”
  • 9) “Native American Tribes Get a Seat at the Climate Table”
  • 10) “Climate Shock: UC-Berkeley Scientist Dr. John Harte Puts the World On Notice”
  • Part Three: Human Health and a Living Earth
  • 11) “Occupy Your Diet: A Discussion About Food, Health and Kindness With Dr. Neal Barnard"
  • 12) “Eating You Alive: Environmental Cancer”
  • 13) Food That Might Protect Your Brain and Save Your Life: A Discussion About the Ecology of Alzheimers With Dr. Neal Barnard”
  • 14) “Biological Shock-Treatment: A Discussion With ‘Deadly Monopolies’ Author Harriet A. Washington”
  • 15) “Bioeconomics: A New National Blueprint”
  • Part Four: Ecology and the Human Population Explosion
  • 16) “Six Billion or Fifteen Billion People: A Discussion With Environmental Scientist Leon Kolankiewicz”
  • 17) “A King’s Speech That Could Help Save The World: A Discussion With UC-Berkeley’s Dr. Malcolm Potts”
  • 18) “Planet Under Siege: Family Planning Critics Soon to See Global Population Reach 7,000,000,000”
  • 19) “China’s Demographic and Ecological Conundrum”
  • Part Five: Ecological Heroes
  • 20) “One Woman’s Remarkable Quest to Save Africa’s White Lion”
  • 21) “A Discussion With UNOPS Luminary Ms. Maria-Noel Vaeza”
  • 22) “Down To Earth: The World According to Ted Turner”
  • 23) “How the Life of a Chipmunk in Michigan Came to Save Elephants and a Million Acres in Cambodia”
  • 24) “Helen Clark: UNDP’s Pragmatic Visionary”
  • 25) “A Jain Leader Addresses the World”
  • 26) “A Discussion With Jane Goodall”
  • Part Six: The State of the World
  • 27) “China Declares Global State of Emergency: An Urgent Telegram from Taihu”
  • 28) “Japan’s Tragedy: Global Ecological Uncertainty”
  • 29) “Before the Fall: Syria’s Ecosystems”
  • 30) “Sir Simon Jenkins, England’s National Trust, and the Future of Conservation in Great Britain”
  • 31) “Extinction: Poachers Test the Right to Life”
  • Part Seven: Animal Rights
  • 32) “Compassionate Conservation: A Discussion From the Frontlines with Dr. Marc Bekoff”
  • 33) “Animal Rights in China”
  • 35) “Why Insects Sing: A Discussion With David Rothenberg”
  • 36) “Protecting Bambi With Drones: PETA’s Ingrid Newkirk on Hunters, Horsemeat and More”
  • Part Eight: Why Your Neighbor Is Important: New Strategies for a Bright Future
  • 37) “The Heart of Education: A Discussion With Zoe Weil”
  • 38) “Journey to the Center of the World: An Interview With Dr. Wayne Clough, Secretary of the Smithsonian"
  • 39) “How A Single National Park Might Help Transform a Nation: Haiti’s Pic Macaya”
  • 40) “Conservation International: Stemming the Tide of Environmental Crises”
  • 41) “The Future of Life on Earth”
  • 42) “On Parrots, Eagles and Fighting Species Extinction”
  • Part Nine: Ecological Paradise?
  • 43) “An Ecological Paradise in Southern India: A Discussion About the Todas With Dr. Tarun Chhabra”
  • 44) “J. P. Morgan, Edward Curtis and Christopher Cardozo: An Inspired Collaboration”
  • 45) “A New Natural History Blueprint for Universities: A Discussion With Graham Arader”
  • 46) “God’s Country: The New Zealand Factor”
  • 47) “New Territories: Artist Astrid Preston Celebrates the Earth in a Landmark Nature Exhibition”
  • 48) “Lenin Moreno 2012 Nobel Peace Prize Nominee Reflects on Human Welfare and the Rights of Nature”
  • 49) “Nigel Brown: A New Zealand Original”
  • 50) “The Last Shangri-la? A Conversation With Bhutan’s Secretary of the National Environment Commission, Dr. Ugyen Tshewang”. 51) Afterword: "A Paris Declaration on Climate Change: Humanity's Last Chance for Meaningful Action to Combat Irreversible Global Biological Disaster".                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            .